More details of President Donald Trump's random response to the new Corona virus epidemic were revealed in a surprising new report published by The Atlantic Monday night.

"On March 13, President Trump promised Americans that they would soon be able to enter a new site that could ask them about their symptoms and direct them to the closest corona virus test sites, and Trump said that Google would help build this site. But that was not true," the report said. ".

"The Atlantic" added, but in the following days, Oscar Health, a health insurance company that has a relationship with the president's daughter-in-law, Jared Kushner, developed a government website with the same features that President Trump described. A team of "Oscar Health" engineers, project managers and executives spent about 5 days to create the site at the request of the government, an Oscar Health spokesman told The Atlantic magazine.

The company sent two of its employees from New York to meet in person with federal officials in Washington, DC, the spokesman said. And then the site was canceled suddenly and mysteriously, according to the magazine’s report.

The report said that there was no previous talk about the work of the company "Oscar" in this project.

This partnership between the American administration and the "Oscar" company suggests that Kushner may have confused his family's commercial interests with his political interests, and his role in the administration's response to the Corona virus.

"The Atlantic" noted that "the nature of Kushner's work in the team dealing with the Corona crisis collided with federal laws. And the participation of (Oscar) in the project deepened the ethical problems and conflict of interests of Kushner."